what it takes is 'ce qu'il faut' in French. He doesn't have what it takes to be a ..." = il n'a pas ce qu'il faut pour être un ...
you mean "she takes", right? elle prend.
Il prend une commande
In French, you would say "l'amour prend du temps."
'Maman prend aussi soin de ma famille.'
ça (informal) prend beaucoup de temps - cela (formal) prend beaucoup de temps
Fleur is a French equivalent of 'blossom'. The word in French is a feminine gender noun that takes as its definite article 'la' ['the'] and as its indefinite article 'une' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'fluhr'.
to please is 'plaire' in French. Note: Plaire takes indirect object pronouns, i.e. "Ça lui plait" means "This pleases to him" and corresponds to the English "He is pleased by this."
to say is the verb 'dire' in French.
In French, to say 'she' , you say:Elleeg. elle s'appelle comment?In French, to say 'he', you say:Il
To say "French assignment" in French, you can say "devoir de français."
You say "j'aime le français" to say "I love French" in French.
to say meatballs in french you say: boulettes